Archive for the 'University' Category

Election Night

So it’s election night here in the UK - whist’s the outcome is pretty much certain there have been unexpected upsets before so you never quite know what will happen in the next few hours. I went to vote at about 1pm and was a bit surprised to find the poling station unexpectedly quite considering it was lunchtime and you might have imagined that people would have come to vote on the lunch break but who knows…!

I have to give a presentation for my Project Management course today. I did it on the topic of “Conflict Management” - it went OK I think, I didn’t much enjoy doing it but it seemed fairly well received!

Talk about dumbing down - a classic case of “re-branding” has taken place with the ‘University of Durham’ metamorphosing into ‘Durham University - confused? So you should be! The rather absurd reasoning behind it is modernisation or perhaps more of an Americanisation? To be honest the new logo looks far less professional than the old one but that’s progress for you!

A few links worth a click:

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Adverse Effects

It’s amazing how six months can pass so quickly, which incidentally is the release cycle period of the Gnome desktop environment. Last week saw the release of Gnome 2.10 and although I haven’t had a chance to upgrade yet the reviews are looking very positive. Everythings basically been polished up and better organised by the looks of things but this can only every been a good thing and I look forward to even better things to come in future releases!

This is my last week in Durham before I return home for the Easter holidays (all 5 weeks of it!!) but before I get to excited I have to keep reminding myself of the pile of project and revision work which awaits me! Yesterday I had an A0 (i.e. very big) version of my project poster printed, it looks pretty good stuck on my wall right now (if I do say so myself!).

Do you remember the cool Honda adverts which featured a series of mechanical devices setting each other off in sequence, apparently taking 606 takes to shoot (allegedly)? Now some enterprising folks have put together their own ‘contraption‘ in a similar (but not quite so slick) vain. Take a look at the videos on both sites, really nutty-professor stuff :)

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Synchronized

Something which has really been bugging me recently - why-ohh-why is Hollywood insisting on remaking (badly) every Asian classic (by which I mean ‘good’) film they can get the rights to? For some reason the thought of taking a great film, running it through a translator and then removing all the intellectual or controversial bits seriously annoys me. People talk about multiculturalism but isn’t this the worst example of cultural vandalism? Are the general public so stupid that they can’t read subtitles? Heaven forbid that they might actually learn something about other cultures through film. I’m not advocating that foreign film be restricted for the privileged few but that we should be more open minded to different cultures rather than be hidden from them. Generally I avoid Americanised remakes at all costs as to my mind a remake of anything which has originally excited or inspired you can only ever fail to live up to expectations. The world is an exciting and diverse place, don’t insult my intelligence by carrying on with this. Creativity is more than copying.

Now that’s out my system…

HHGTTG

Quite a cool new trailer for the upcoming Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy film turned up the other day - take a look at it here. I’m still far from convinced but it doesn’t look terrible.

HHGTTG

This week, along with a host other things, I’m working on an assignment for the ‘Distributed Computing‘ course I’m taking. The only trouble is that it has turned out to be VERY hard and the information required to complete it seems to be hidden in the mind of a dead Computer Scientist so in other words not a lot of help! Anyone with knowledge of ALPHA, BETA or GAMMA Synchronizers please contact me ASAP!

I’ve always wanted to visit a proper “Mega City” (i.e. one that’s really really big!) but in the absence of this happening so far here are some amazing shots of Tokyo’s urban sprawl - incredible!

N.B. Sorry if you’ve been unable to comment recently, I only just noticed that it’s been broken for quite a while it seems. All fixed now :)

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Quasi Design

Been a stressful last few days with deadlines looming and things are becoming a bit tense. Food in college has reached new lows recently so cheese sandwiches are becoming more regular ;) Other than that things are good - at least my room is big, warm & relatively comfortable! Since my recent foray into graphic design I’ve been searching around the net and have found some pretty good design blogs which I’ve added to a new links category on the nav bar. Check them out!

By chance I’ve stubled accross a lot of facinating photography related links recently which I though are worth sharing:

Paris Floods

Photos of Paris Flood, 1910 - Amazing Sepia and B&W photos of Paris underwater.

WW2 in Colour

World War 2 Pictures in Colour - Another incredible collection of photos which brings home the realities of what my generation has been lucky enough to have never experienced. Definitely worth a browse.

Telephoto Is For Cowards - How to take ‘candid’ photos without looking like an idiot brandishing a camera!

Technicolor - An explanation to what it was/is for those who have ever wondered when you see the logo before an old film shot using this unique method for getting colour from B&W film.

[Some links via kottke.org]

Cardiac System

Looks like someone else has been getting creative with quasi geographic representations - cool!

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Tube/Subway/Metro

The design of the London Underground map has long fascinated me. It’s abandonment of conventional geographic layout was pure genius on the part of its creator, Harry Beck, in 1933 and continues to be the model for which the majority of MRT (Mass Rapid Transit) systems around the world base their maps today.

I’d been looking for an excuse for a while to produce my own ‘underground’ style map using similar principles but never really managed to justify it… until now! Using some possibly rather tenuous reasoning I decided to map Durham (where I live!) as part of my ‘Network Visualisation‘ project that I’m carrying out this year for my course. The preliminary result can be seen below, and I’m pretty pleased with it (click here for a larger version):

Durham MRT System
(c) 2005 David Gilbert

After sketching it out roughly on paper I produced it in a great piece of software called Inkscape which is an Open Source Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) editor (similar to Illustrator but free!). SVG is a language for describing two-dimensional graphics and graphical applications in XML - the cool thing about it being that you can scale the graphics to any size with zero loss of resolution.

I’ve tried to retain a high-degree of geographical relevance to the map whilst simplifying the details of its layout. Anyone slightly familiar with Durham should be able navigate themselves around (by foot!) using it. Once I’ve done a bit more research I’ll post up a more detailed overview but right now It’s still a work in progress - if you have any comments/suggestions I would greatly appreciate them!

Update (02/03): I’ve just updated the map to version 1.6 (from 1.4). It includes a number of minor improvements which have been made from feedback :)

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